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  • Article with no trackers

    The encrypted messaging app Signal is growing – now even the Swedish Armed Forces are using the app.

    But the government wants to force the company to introduce a technical backdoor for the Police and the Swedish Security Service.

    "If it becomes a reality, we will leave Sweden," says Signal's boss Meredith Whittaker, in an exclusive interview with SVT.

    If the government has its way, the bill will be passed in the Riksdag as early as March next year.

    The bill states that companies such as Signal and Whatsapp will be forced to store all messages sent using the apps.

    Leaving Sweden Signal – which is run by a non-profit foundation – now states to SVT Nyheter that the company will leave Sweden if the bill becomes a reality.

    "In practice, this means that we are being asked to break the encryption that is the basis of our entire business. Asking us to store data would undermine our entire architecture and we would never do that. We would rather leave the Swedish market completely," says Signal's head of Meredith Whittaker.

    She says the bill would require Signal to install so-called backdoors in the software.

    "If you create a vulnerability based on Swedish wishes, it would create a path to undermine our entire network. Therefore, we would never introduce these backdoors.

    But don't you as a supplier have a responsibility to support efforts against crime?

    "Our responsibility is to offer technology that upholds human rights in an era where those rights are being violated in more and more places. In today's digital world, there are very few places where we can communicate privately or whistleblow.

    The Armed Forces critical Meredith Whittaker mentions the Chinese state actor Salt Typhoon's 2024 attack on several internet service providers in the United States, where text messages and phone calls were leaked. She believes that a Swedish back door would open the door for the same thing.

    "There are no back doors that only the good guys have access to.

    The purpose of the bill is to enable the Security Service and the police to request subsequent notification history for persons suspected of crime. Both authorities were positive in the consultation round.

    "The opportunities for law enforcement authorities to effectively access electronic communications are absolutely crucial," Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer (M) said earlier at a press conference.

    But the Armed Forces are negative and recently the Armed Forces urged their personnel to start using Signal to reduce the risk of eavesdropping.

    In a letter to the government, the Armed Forces writes that the bill will not be able to be realized "without introducing vulnerabilities and back doors that may be used by third parties".

  • Bluray rips are the best, sadly it consumes too much bandwith and energy.

  • British people don't even know what signal is, and if they do, they will name it a terrorist tool

  • Oh now that does it, of course local storage is superior!

    Gentlemen, set up your Z3JhcGhlbmVPUw== duress passwords

  • This is called an TLDR

  • Thanks for clarifying, I hate the fact even deepseek does not reply with facts like this.

    Anyway when do they start breaking your kneecaps for refusing?

  • At that point use the duress password with the police

  • Calm down Satan

    Jump
  • Man I wanna do a sudo shred -rf / --no-preserve-root on the NSA databases

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • why do you need a firewall anyway? A VPN should be enough

  • Muchas Gracias! :cat-thumbs-up:

  • I am impressed with your clean text wall! Btw there has been some efforts for a museum like this one, it just released a few days ago.

    https://library.gamehistory.org/

  • Straight to jail

  • I tried to copy some text in a report once.

    It came out as gibberish.

  • Straight to jail